Louis Bayard, author of Jackie & Me
in conversation with Christina Clancy, in-person at Boswell - click here to register!
Boswell Book Company hosts Louis Bayard, the bestselling author of The Pale Blue Eye and Courting Mr. Lincoln, for a conversation about his witty, sensitive new novel about the young Jacqueline Bouvier during the time before she became that Jackie and the marriage that almost never happened. In conversation with Christina Clancy, author of Shoulder Season and The Second Home.
In the spring of 1951, debutante Jacqueline Bouvier, working for the Washington Times-Herald, meets Jack Kennedy, a charming Congressman from a notorious and powerful family, at a party in DC. Young, rebellious, eager to break free from her mother, Jackie is drawn to the elusive young politician, and soon she and Jack are bantering over secret dinner dates and short work phone calls. Only gradually does Jackie begin to realize that she is being groomed to be the perfect political wife, whether Jack is interested in settling down or not. Sharply written, steeped in the era and with witty appearances by members of the extended Kennedy clan, this is Jackie as never before seen, in a story about love, sacrifice, friendship, and betrayal.Louis Bayard is a New York Times Notable Book author and has been shortlisted for both the Edgar and Dagger awards for his historical thrillers, which include The Pale Blue Eye and Mr. Timothy. He teaches at George Washington University.
Daniel's note: You can read my blog post on Jackie & Me right here.
In-Person at Shorewood Public Library, 3920 N Murray Ave - click here for more information.
Shorewood Public Library presents Milwaukee poet Stephen Anderson for a presentation featuring his poetry collection High Wire. Cosponsored by Boswell Book Company; we will be on hand at the event to sell copies.
High Wire is a collection that deals with several themes. It is not a “pandemic book” per se, though it does deal with pandemic-imposed changes and complications that we all have had to face to one degree or another - family separation, loss of connection with friends, death, vulnerability to known and unknown aspects of our lives, love, as well as the risks involved in personal choices that life tosses our way from time to time. In short, we all must venture onto our own personal ‘high wire’ and learn to balance our way to carving our own destiny.Former Wisconsin Poet Laureate Kim Blaeser offers the following praise for Anderson’s work: "High Wire explores universal emotional territory: the ‘shaky, thin wire we all must tread’ in ‘these dire, barely translatable, times.’ But translate the poet does. Here, through the everyday of beauty of ‘brazen-faced marigolds’ or the in macabre memory of a drowned fisherman, Stephen Anderson looks unflinchingly at the ‘jarring and jagged cut-you-up things,’ but ultimately attests to the way ‘true things linger.’ These stirring poems probe the mysterious edges of those true things, that ‘juncture of the lucid and the luminous.’"
Stephen Anderson is author of In the Garden of Angels and Demons and The Dream Angel Plays The Cello, his work has appeared in Southwest Review, Verse Wisconsin, and Tipton Poetry Journal, among many other outlets, and his poems have been featured by WUWM's Lake Effect. Six of his poems formed the text for a chamber music song cycle entitled The Privileged Secrets of the Arch performed by some musicians from the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra and an opera singer.
Geraldine Brooks, author of Horse
in conversation with Sarah Maslin Nir for a virtual event - click here to register for this event. There is a book-with-registration option, and shipping is available to the contiguous United States.
Geraldine Brooks is author of the the international bestsellers The Secret Chord, Caleb’s Crossing, and Year of Wonders. She has also written the acclaimed nonfiction works Nine Parts of Desire and Foreign Correspondence. Sarah Maslin Nir was named a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting for her groundbreaking and industry-changing reportage on the working conditions of nail salon workers.
Daniel's note: Tim McCarthy and I are fans of this one. I still recall fondly Geraldine Brooks's visit to Boswell for Caleb's Crossing. We had a lovely dinner with former booksellers Sharon and Anne.
Louis Bayard by Anna Carson Dewitt
Christina Clancy by Kate Berg
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